Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up

Monkeypox virus found on household surfaces in one Utah home

Share
Monkeypox virus found on household surfaces in one Utah home
Photo by De an Sun / Unsplash

Researchers looked at one household in Utah where people had monkeypox infections. They tested various objects and surfaces in the home to see if the virus was present. They found that the monkeypox virus was indeed contaminating household items, suggesting it can spread to surfaces people touch.

This was a single case report, meaning it only studied one specific household. We don't know how many people lived there or for how long the virus was present. The report doesn't tell us if anyone got sick from touching these surfaces or how easily the virus spreads this way.

Because this is just one household's experience, we can't say these findings apply to all homes or situations. The study didn't compare this home to others without infection or measure how much virus was present.

Readers should understand this shows the virus can get on surfaces in homes with infected people. It supports existing advice about cleaning and handwashing when caring for someone with monkeypox. However, this single report doesn't change what we already know about how monkeypox primarily spreads through close, personal contact.

What this means for you:
Monkeypox virus was found on surfaces in one home, but this single case doesn't show how common this is.
Share
More on Monkeypox